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1111) Commentary Note for line 3664_366:
3664-5 Ham. It is but foolery, but it is such a kinde of | {gamgiuing,} <gain-giuing> as
3665 would perhapes trouble a woman. 3665

    ... >But it is such a kind of gain-giuing</i>]] That is, misgiving. See Theobald's Shakespear restored, p. 127.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> </tab>v1 ...

    ... the dialogue with Horatio, his fine gentlemanly manners with Osric, and his and Shakespeare's own fondness for presentiment:&#8212;'But thou would'st not think, ...

    ... he dialogue with Horatio, his fine gentlemanly manners with Osrick, and his and Shakespeare's own fondness for presentiment.' H&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> </cn> ...

    ... he right word should be <i>imagining</i>, which is only used twice elsewhere in Shakespeare, and in both cases is connected with dread. Thus, we have in [<i>MND ...

    ... >]] foreboding, presentiment of evil. Perhaps stronger than &#8216;misigiving': Shakespeare thinks of &#8216;gain' as in &#8216;gainsay'&#8212;indicating opposi ...
1112) Commentary Note for line 3666_366:
3666-7 Hora. If your minde dislike any thing, obay {it}. I will for|stal their
3667 repaire hether, and say you are not fit.

    ... ON Chron. II. 113 The sayde Lewes was in all pointes fit for their handes. 1596 SHAKES. Merch. V. V. i. 85 The man that hath no musicke in himselfe..Is fit for ...
1113) Commentary Note for line 3668_366:
3668-9 Ham. Not a whit, we defie augury, {there is} <there's a> speciall | prouidence in

    ... ng>Lectures</hanging><para><sc>3668-73+1<tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...

    ... Coleridge, </sc>1998, 12.4:859): &lt;p. 859&gt;&#x201C;and his [[Hamlet]] &amp; Shakespear's fondness for presentiment[[3668-3673+1]]&#8212;O my prophetic Soul[ ...

    ... C;This passage is one of the simplest, as it is one of the strongest, proofs of Shakespeare's belief in presentiments. In all the instances he gives us, the mor ...

    ... Par. Thess. 4, I defie all thinges in comparison of the gospel of Christ. 1600 SHAKES. A.Y.L. Epil. 21 If I were a Woman, I would kisse as many of you as had.. ...
1114) Commentary Note for line 3668:
3678 Ham. Giue me your pardon sir, {I haue} <I'ue> done you wrong,

    ... at the moment he was labouring.&#8212;There is no moral obliquity of vision in Shakespeare, &#8216;if then you do not like him, surely you are in some manifest ...

    ... fight with Laertes at the grave ((cf. <sc>Dover Wilson</sc>, NCS [New Cambridge Shakespeare], pp. lxii-lxiv)). It is the second which gives substance to Hamlet' ...

    ... , a proleptic image of the revengers' exchange of forgiveness ((see [3813-6])). Shakespeare's problem is to show the two revengers as at the same time mutually ...
1115) Commentary Note for line 3669_367:
3669-70 the fall of a Sparrowe, if it be <now>, tis not | to come, if it be not to come,
3670-1 it will be now, if it | be not now, yet it {well} <will> come, the readines is all,

    ... ng>Lectures</hanging><para><sc>3668-73+1<tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...

    ... Coleridge, </sc>1998, 12.4:859): &lt;p. 859&gt;&#x201C;and his [[Hamlet]] &amp; Shakespear's fondness for presentiment[[3668-3673+1]]&#8212;O my prophetic Soul[ ...

    ... llowed by Capell, Malone, Steevens (1793), the Editors of the three <i>Variorum Shakespeares</i>, 1803, 1813, 1821, Singer, Harness and Mr. Collier.</para> <par ...
1116) Commentary Note for line 3671_367:
3671-3 since no | man {of} <ha's> ought <of what> he leaues, {knowes} what ist to leaue be|times, 3671-3
3673+1 {let be.}

    ... /i>.. But the ill pointing in the old book hindered the editors from seeing <i>Shakespear's</i> sense, and encouraged them to venture at one of their own, thou ...

    ... ng>Lectures</hanging><para><sc>3668-73+1<tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...

    ... Coleridge, </sc>1998, 12.4:859): &lt;p. 859&gt;&#x201C;and his [[Hamlet]] &amp; Shakespear's fondness for presentiment[[3668-3673+1]]&#8212;O my prophetic Soul[ ...

    ... llowed by Capell, Malone, Steevens (1793), the Editors of the three <i>Variorum Shakespeares</i>, 1803, 1813, 1821, Singer, Harness and Mr. Collier.</para> <par ...

    ... sc> (<i>apud</i> <sc>Rylands</sc>, ed. 1947, Notes): &#x201C;I think . . . that Shakespeare had come across Seneca's <i>Nihil peris ex tuo tempore, nam quod rel ...

    ... e happened in the present case. By repeating <i>aught</i>, which, if it was not Shakespeare's word, at least does not pervert what Q2 points to as his sense, I ...
1117) Commentary Note for line 3674_367:
3675 {A table prepard, Trumpets, Drums and officers with Cushions,}
3674 {King, Queene, and all the state, Foiles, daggers,}
3674 { and Laertes.}
3674 <Enter King, Queene, Laertes and Lords, with other Atten->
3675 <dants with Foyles, and Gauntlets, a Table and>
3676 <Flagons of Wine on it.>

    ... ns many of his eminent <i>confreres </i>in medicine, and blots the lesson which Shakespeare intended that Hamlet's life should teach: for &#x201C;the blow,' he ...

    ... ns of a debauched throne, sparks of Hamlet's towering intellect, the marvels of Shakespeare's genius&#8212;become dazzling stars in the firmament of the &lt;/p. ...

    ... :&#8212;'What warlike noise is this?' Are these, I ask the myriad worshipers of Shakespeare's genius, an insane man's acts and words? He uses the only argument ...

    ... helia, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. According to the English lexicographer and Shakespearian commentator Johnson, &#8216;to blame' generally implies &#8216;but ...

    ... n, &#8216;to blame' generally implies &#8216;but slight censure,' and he quotes Shakespeare to illustrate his opinion. Undoubtedly, Laertes, keenly conscious o ...

    ... te. Inconsistency, and errors of judgment are to man inherent; and no where did Shakespeare, in his wondrous knowledge of human life, show his skill more thorou ...

    ... ter portion of the opinion quoted from Dr. Kellogg, should at all prevail, when Shakespeare, himself, rejects it in a different work. His plays of &#8216;Othell ...

    ... e gauntlets. It is quite possible that the book-keeper had ideas different from Shakespeare about staging the fight, but <sc>Wilson</sc>'s view that F represent ...

    ... e of F is correct [that F is based on a &#x201C;fair-copy&#x201D; transcript of Shakespeare's own &#x201C;foul paper&#x201D; revisions of the play].&#x201D;</pa ...

    ... long Troy shal to wracke, [and] Priam with his state Shal passe the sword. 1597 SHAKES. 2 Hen. IV, V. ii. 142 Our Coronation done, we will accite..all our State ...
1118) Commentary Note for line 3679_368:
3679-80 But pardon't as you are a gentleman, | this presence knowes,
3681 And you must needs haue heard, how I am punnisht
3682 With {a} sore distraction, what I haue done

    ... b>] <sc>Dowden </sc>(ed. 1899): &#x201C;royal and courtly assembly; frequent in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1931<tab> </tab><sc>crg1</sc></sigl ...

    ... s..forgetten theimselfes..[and] maken all the presence to laughe at theim. 1598 SHAKESPEARE Loves Labours Lost V. ii. 529 Heere is like to be a good presence of ...
1119) Commentary Note for line 3696:
3696 And hurt my {brother} <Mother>. {N4}

    ... tions, but in the folios the word is <i>mother</i>. The change might be made by Shakespeare after he retired to Stratford, the passage as it originally stood co ...

    ... n towards Gertrude). Can it be that this reading of [F1] was an afterthought of Shakespeare?&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1931<tab> </tab><sc>crg1</sc></sigl ...
1120) Commentary Note for line 3697_369:
3697 Laer. I am satisfied in nature,
3698 Whose motiue in this case should stirre me most

    ... ffer for it.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 230&gt;</para> <sigla>(<i>Prolegomena and Notes on Shakespeare</i> [BL ADD. MS. 24495 ] : pp. 219-46)</sigla> </cn> <cn> <sigla> ...

    ... d. 1987): &#x201C;i.e. where my honour is concerned ((<i>OED term sb.</i> 10)). Shakespeare is rather addicted to this periphrastic use of <i>terms of</i>. See, ...

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